Summary

Owner

Current status

Targeted release: 0.100

Last updated: 09.26.2013

Percentage of completion: 100%

Detailed Description

It has been reported that teachers are upset by the fact that children have differing collections of activities on their home views; to the extent that some deployments forbid children from loading "unofficial" activities onto their machines. As an easy workaround to both offering the teacher a consistent classroom experience for each child and for the children to have the freedom to modify their system's look and feel to their convenience and taste, I am proposing to have two home views: one for school and one for personal use.

I propose replacing the spiral vs random view buttons with school vs personal buttons (using the school and xo icons). There would be a separate collection of activities for each view, set in the list view. View names can also be set.

There are several ways we could implement this:

The most simple, non-invasive solution would be to have starred and unstarred views. The starred view would be exactly the same as the current home view. The unstarred would show those activities that are not starred.

A variant of the above would be to have a tristate star in the list view, where a third star is in the user's colors and the two home views be filled or user filled.

Instead of a star, there would be a school and an xo. Activities could appear in either, both, or none (As shown in the illustration below).

Note: In the illustration, the selection is in the secondary menu. Upon reflection, I think it should part of the primary selection (in line with the list view, replacing the current circle icon).

Note: the current method of selecting home view style, e.g.,spiral or random, could (arguably should) be replaced by standard secondary menus. (Is there anywhere else in the entire interface where we use these secondary button menus? -- admittedly, this style may be more suitable for touch, in which case all secondary menus should work that way.)

Benefit to Sugar

The Sugar user would have more options regarding layout (most window managers provide multiple desktops) and the teacher could ask for a more structured configuration when desired.

Scope

The changes would be to sugar/src/jarabe/desktop activitylist.py, favoriteslayout.py and favoriteview.py

How To Test

In Sugar 100, you need to use gconf settings to enable it. In Sugar 102+, we use gsettings.

gsettings instructions for Sugar 102+

Add an override to /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas/sugar.oob.gschema.override

Notes on using Gconf

The previous "how to test" section assumes familiarity with Gconf. Gconf is the Gnome preferences configuration system. It is being used to store Sugar preferences in this case. You can start the tool from the command line in Terminal. The -2 in gconftool-2 means that you are using version 2 of Gconf. Typical switches are

-s set a value
-u unset a value
-g get (print) a value
-t set the type (eg int) of a value

User Experience

The user would have have two desktops, plus the list view. As is the case now, all activities will show up in the list view.

Dependencies

No new dependencies

Contingency Plan

Documentation

Release Notes

Multiple home pages are enabled using gconf, e.g., to enable two home views: